• Tool Dad, who lusts after a hemi-powered riding lawn mower or power drill.

• Beer Dad, who just wants to relax with his buds and a keg of his favorite brew.

This seems kinda limited. There must be other types out there. For instance, in compiling the Video Calendar this week, I ran across a couple of DVD reissues of old, discredited titles that would certainly appeal to a type that perhaps should be called Sleazy Dad.

• “Showgirls 15th Anniversary Edition”: It’s hilarious that what’s considered one of the worst movies ever made would be deemed worthy of an anniversary edition. And this isn’t an your run-of-the-mill anniversary edition — it’s the “Sinsational Edition,” which came out on Blu-ray on Tuesday.

It’s at least the third special-edition version of “Showgirls,” following “Fully Exposed” and “VIP LImited” editions that came out in 2007 and 2004, respectively.

Since today it’s regarded as a punch line and a blot on the careers of its key participants — director Paul Verhoeven, screenwriter Joe Eszterhas and stars Elizabeth Berkley and Gina Gershon — it’s worth pointing out that it was considered something of a big deal at the time. The big names involved, as well as the fact that it was the widest-release NC-17 film at the time, made it newsworthy.

And it was even on the cover of Weekender. Hard to believe, I know.

Anyway, what critic Tom Keough calls “this sleazy, stupid movie” on Amazon.com went from career-killer to cult/midnight-movie hit. The two-disc Blu-ray edition from MGM apparently plays up to that, boasting that it “bulges with more features than a lap-dancer’s bustier.” It includes a commentary track from someone who hated the movie, plus a lap-dance lesson, trivia and a feature called “Pole Dancing: Find Your Inner Stripper.”

Classy.

According to one writer, if you don’t belong to the so-bad-it’s-good crowd, watch out. He wrote of the new Blu-ray release, “Seeing the film for the first time in a decade-and-a-half, I was struck by how truly horrible it is.”

• “Sleazy Sci-Fi of the 1970s”: This could be passed off as a movie history lesson that draws from a unique era — the years between the debut of “Deep Throat” in 1972, which brought soft-core adult films into the mainstream, and the advent of video, which killed the whole thing off.

This collection compiles three ’70s grindhouse titles — “Invasion of the Bee Girls,” “2069: A Sex Odyssey” and “Dr. Dildo’s Secret.” Having actually seen another such title, “Flesh Gordon,” in my teens, I’m guessing these three are part campy, part boring and not as sexy as the titles suggest.

Considering that these films and the movie houses that showed them vanished long ago, it’s interesting to go back and review how prevalent they once were. A check of the Weekender of Sept. 23, 1977, for instance, showed some 17 X-rated titles playing in San Antonio, at mainstream walk-in theaters like the Central Park Fox as well as drive-ins.

Something else you don’t see anymore — big-budget soft-core releases, and porn stars doing press for them. This particular Weekender listed two of them — “Cinderella” (with the tagline “what the Prince slipped Cinderella was not a slipper…”) and “Eruption,” starring the legendary John Holmes, who stopped in S.A. for an interview to promote the film.

Anyway, back to the three films in question, I have no idea if they are representative examples of the genre, although one critic calls “Bee Girls” (1973) “the best shlock soft-core science fiction movie since maybe ‘The Vengeance of She.’ ” Another begged to differ, writing of the entire collection, “what a strange and awful group of movies…”

“Dr. Dildo’s Secret” did bring an unusual, uh, connection to mind. The story line, according to amazon. com: “Obsessed with the desire to create a perfect woman, a mad scientist grows facsimiles in his basement — and breathes them into life through sex!”

Women coming alive from sex; where have I heard that before? Wait…wasn’t that the premise of that old Conway Twitty hit “Tight Fittin’ Jeans”? The bouncy country-pop tune described a barroom encounter between a cowboy and a bored upper-class woman who married money and was looking for someone to awaken “the tiger in those tight fittin’ jeans.” When Conway sings of the night he “knew a lady wearin’ tight-fittin’ jeans,” it’s presumed he meant “knew” in the biblical sense.

Between that one and the 1973 chart-topper “You’ve Never Been This Far Before,” which, the first time I heard it, I couldn’t believe my ears, ol’ Conway, who died in 1993, was a pretty randy soul back in the day. Maybe he spent some of his down time watching movies…